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      ‘By‐day’ boys and dariga Men: casual labour versus Agrarian capital in Northern Ghana

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      research-article
      Review of African Political Economy
      Review of African Political Economy
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            Abstract

            The development of agrarian capitalism in Africa has accelerated in recent years and is taking several forms. In some areas, peasant labour is managed by state and international agencies and exploited on irrigation and settlement schemes; multinational agribusiness is frequently involved. Elsewhere private entrepreneurship by Africans, often subsidised by the state, is prominent, and the hire of wage labour by such entrepreneurs is widespread and expanding. It is with the latter form of capitalist agriculture that this paper is concerned.

            In many parts of Africa the development of capitalist agriculture has led to immiseration among rural people and increased their exploitation. But this has not always been the case and it is not inevitable. In northern Ghana the rural population has not succumbed to the all‐powerful, rampant capitalism of the orthodox Marxist model. The real activity of rural labour has constrained the emergence of capitalist rice farming from the late 1960s. Through their struggles, labourers have done relatively well. This paper will examine how capitalist farmers attempted to mobilise labour, to induce workers’ commitment to capitalist production and how exploitation is carried on. All three processes involve struggles between capital and labour which have shaped agricultural development in the north.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Journal
            crea20
            CREA
            Review of African Political Economy
            Review of African Political Economy
            0305-6244
            1740-1720
            December 1984
            : 11
            : 31
            : 44-56
            Article
            8703599 Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 11, No. 31, December 1984, pp. 44-56
            10.1080/03056248408703599
            b24cf3fd-e22b-4b85-ba2f-8c1f8709b970

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            History
            Page count
            Figures: 0, Tables: 0, References: 9, Pages: 13
            Categories
            Original Articles

            Sociology,Economic development,Political science,Labor & Demographic economics,Political economics,Africa

            Bibliographic note

            1. Shepherd A.. 1979. . “‘The development of capitalist rice farming in northern Ghana’. ”. Cambridge :

            2. Van Hear N. . 1982. . “‘Northern labour and the development of capitalist agriculture in Ghana’. ”. Birmingham :

            3. Hear N. Van. . 1982. . ‘Child Labour and the Development of Capitalist Agriculture in Ghana’. . Development and Change . , Vol. 13:: 499––514. .

            4. Konings P.. 1982. . Capitalist rice farming and peasant communities in the Builsa area of Ghana . , Leiden : : Africa‐Studie Centrum. .

            5. Livingstone I.. 1982. . Rural development, employment and incomes in Kenya . , ILO : : Jobs and Skills Programme for Africa. .

            6. O'Brien J.. 1983. . ‘The formation of the agricultural labour force in the Sudan’. . ROAPE . , Vol. 26:

            7. Clough P and Williams G. . 1984. . “‘Decoding Berg: the World Bank in northern Nigeria’. ”. In The State, Oil and Agriculture in Nigeria . , Edited by: Watts M. . Berkeley : : Institute of International Studies. .

            8. Cohen R. . 1980. . ‘Resistance and hidden forms of consciousness amongst African workers’. . ROAPE . , Vol. 19:

            9. Cardan P. . 1974. . Modern capitalism and revolution . , London : : Solidarity. .

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